Dark Carnival was Ray Bradbury's first book, comprised of some twenty-seven tales, and published by the legendary Arkham House in 1947. While Bradbury would become famous as an SF author, he had always written more than just science fiction, and the early stories collected in Dark Carnival showcase Bradbury's dark side in a brilliant collection of eerie fantasies and imaginative horror tales. Now then, the tales in Dark Carnival have had a long and tangled publishing history (as alluded to last week), which I shall attempt to unravel here. Here are the details of the first edition -
(Arkham House 1947 US)
- The Homecoming
- Skeleton
- The Jar
- The Lake
- The Maiden
- The Tombstone
- The Smiling People
- The Emissary
- The Traveler
- The Small Assassin
- The Crowd
- Reunion
- The Handler
- The Coffin
- Interim
- Jack-in-the-Box
- The Scythe
- Let's Play 'Poison'
- Uncle Einar
- The Wind
- The Night
- There Was An Old Woman
- The Dead Man
- The Man Upstairs
- The Night Sets
- The Cistern
- The Next In Line
DARK CARNIVAL
(Hamish Hamilton 1948 UK)
- The Crowd
- The Emissary
- The Jar
- The Lake
- The Man Upstairs
- The Night
- Skeleton
- The Small Assassin
- There Was An Old Woman
- Uncle Einar
- The Tombstone
- The Next In Line
- The Wind
- The Cistern
- Homecoming (former The Homecoming)
- The Dead Man
- Let's Play 'Poison'
- The Handler
- The Smiling People
- The Traveler
- The Maiden
- The Night Sets
- The Scythe
- Reunion
- Interim
- Jack-in-the-Box
Several years later, fifteen of the tales in the original Dark Carnival were reprinted, some in a revised form, in a later collection entitled The October Country. This was published in the US by Ballantine Books in 1955, with cover art and interior illustrations by Joe Mugnaini. The October Country also included four additional tales, which had previously appeared in other places, but fitted in nicely to the autumnal feel of this collection.
THE OCTOBER COUNTRY
- The Crowd (DC)
- The Emissary (DC)
- The Jar (DC)
- The Lake (DC)
- The Man Upstairs (DC)
- The Scythe (DC)
- Skeleton (DC)
- The Small Assassin (DC)
- There Was An Old Woman (DC)
- Uncle Einar (DC)
- The Dwarf (OC)
- The Next in Line (DC)
- The Watchful Poker Chip of H. Matisse (OC)
- The Wind (DC)
- The Cistern (DC)
- Homecoming (DC)
- The Wonderful Death of Dudley Stone (OC)
- Touched With Fire (OC)
- Jack-in-the-Box (DC)
(DC) = stories from Dark Carnvial (1947)
The October Country was also printed in the UK by Rupert Hard Davis Ltd. in 1956, again with a cover by Joe Mugnaini, a variant of the US edition, but with the stories in a different order.
THE OCTOBER COUNTRY
(Rupert Hard Davis Ltd. 1956 UK)
- The Dwarf (OC)
- The Next in Line (DC)
- The Watchful Poker Chip of H. Matisse (OC)
- Skeleton (DC)
- The Jar (DC)
- The Lake (DC)
- The Emissary (DC)
- Touched With Fire (OC)
- The Small Assassin (DC)
- The Crowd (DC)
- Jack-in-the-Box (DC)
- The Scythe (DC)
- Uncle Einar (DC)
- The Wind (DC)
- The Man Upstairs (DC)
- There Was An Old Woman (DC)
- The Cistern (DC)
- Homecoming (DC)
- The Wonderful Death of Dudley Stone (OC)
Right then, pay close attention, because this is where it gets complicated! The first paperback edition from Ballantine in 1956 reprinted all nineteen stories, and used the running order from the UK hardback. And this remained the format for subsequent paperback editions in the US. Furthermore Rupert Hard Davis Ltd. reissued The October Country as a hardback several times down the decades, retaining the same contents.
However the UK paperback editions somewhat confusingly slimmed down the book, whittling down the story count to thirteen. And there was to be another significant change too - for only twelve tales from The October Country would be included, and the thirteenth tale would be The Traveler from Dark Carnival. This new line-up of thirteen stories first appeared in the 1961 paperback edition from Ace UK, but later was adopted for other editions from the New English Library (in 1970 and 1975), and Panther (1976 and 1984).
THE OCTOBER COUNTRY - UK Paperback Edition(Ace UK 1961)
- The Dwarf (DC) (OC)
- The Watchful Poker Chip of H.Matisse (OC)
- The Skeleton (DC) (OC)
- The Jar (DC) (OC)
- The Traveler (DC)
- The Emissary (DC) (OC)
- Touched with Fire (OC)
- The Scythe (DC) (OC)
- Uncle Einar (DC) (OC)
- The Wind (DC) (OC)
- There was an Old Woman (DC) (OC)
- The Homecoming (DC) (OC)
- The Wonderful Death of Dudley Stone (OC)
However it was a regular publishing convention that large books of short stories like this would often be broken up into two separate volumes for the paperback release. And while they often appeared marked as Such-And-Such Volume 1 and 2, it was not uncommon for publishers to retain the original title for the first half but publish the second with an entirely new title.
So then, in the UK, the missing tales would get a separate volume of their own, one that was not billed as The October Country Vol. II. Instead the rest of the stories would appear in a paperback entitled The Small Assassin. However in this case, as there were only seven stories left over, it was decided to make up the shortfall with a selection of tales from Dark Carnival that have not made it into earlier versions of The October Country.
THE SMALL ASSASSIN
(Ace UK 1962)
(Ace UK 1962)
- The Small Assassin (DC) (OC)
- The Next In Line (DC) (OC)
- The Lake (DC) (OC)
- The Crowd (DC) (OC)
- Jack-In-The-Box (DC) (OC)
- The Man Upstairs (DC) (OC)
- The Cistern (DC) (OC)
- The Tombstone (DC)
- The Smiling People (DC)
- The Handler (DC)
- Let’s Play “Poison” (DC)
- The Night (DC)
- The Dead Man (DC)
The Small Assassin was reprinted in paperback by Four Square in 1964 and 1965, then again by the New English Library in 1970 and 1973, by Panther in 1976, and again by Pather/Granda in 1984. The last edition was by Grafton in 1986. So then, all but five stories from the original Dark Carnival were printed in The October Country and Small Assassin UK paperbacks. For the record, the uncollected tales were -
- The Maiden
- Reunion
- The Coffin
- Interim
- The Night Sets
Now for years, Bradbury forbade a reprinting of Dark Carnival, because he had revised many of the stories for The October Country. However he relented in 2001 and allowed a limited edition to be done. This luxury reprint was limited to 750 copies and featured four new stories and an afterword by Clive Barker. And even more limited edition of 52 copies was produced that was lettered, leather-bound and trayed. This version was signed by both Bradbury and Barker, came a CD of an audio interview with Bradbury, and with a chapbook contained an extra tale - Time Intervening
DARK CARNIVAL
(Gauntlet Press 2001 US)
- Jack-in-the-Box
- Let's Play 'Poison'
- Reunion
- Skeleton
- The Cistern
- The Coffin
- The Crowd
- The Dead Man
- The Emissary
- The Handler
- The Jar
- The Lake
- The Maiden
- The Man Upstairs
- The Next In Line
- The Night
- The Night Sets
- The Scythe
- The Small Assassin
- The Smiling People
- The Tombstone
- The Traveler
- The Wind
- There Was An Old Woman
- Uncle Einar
- Editors Notes - essay by Donn Alright
- Dark Carnival Revisited - essay by Ray Bradbury
- Dark Carnival: A History - essay by Jon Eller
- The Last Unknown: An Afterword by Clive Barker
- The Sea Shell*
- The Watchers*
- Bang! You're Dead!*
- The Poems*
- The Homecoming
- Interim
* new stories added in this edition
However previously the Gauntlet Press also published a limited edition of The October Country too in 1997 for its 40th anniversary. This was limited to 500 copies, with a deluxe leather-bound edition of 52 copies. There were no new stories added to this edition, so I shall spare you all another listing!
And finally, and for the sake of completeness, Bradbury was to write few more tales concerning the strange and monstrous Elliot Family who feature in three tales first published in Dark Carnival, which would appear in his collections The Golden Apples of the Sun (1953), The Toynbee Convector (1988). In 2001, all the Elliot Family tales were collected into a single volume entitled From the Dust Returned and woven into a novel format. It was published by William Morrow/Harper Collins and appropriately enough featured a cover by Charles Addams.
- The April Witch (from The Golden Apples of the Sun 1953)
- Homecoming (from Dark Carnival)
- West of October (from The Toynbee Convector 1988)
- On the Orient North (from The Toynbee Convector 1988)
- Uncle Einar (from Dark Carnival)
- The Traveler (from Dark Carnival)
- From the Dust Returned (originally only published in The Magazine of Fantasy &Science Fiction, September 1994)
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